Italy 1 New Zealand 1

(Reuters) – Highlights of Sunday’s World Cup Group F match which saw Italy and New Zealand draw 1-1 at the Mbombela stadium.

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7 – GOAL – ITALY 0 NEW ZEALAND 1 – New Zealand take a shock lead when a long free kick into the box reaches Shane Smeltz who pokes the ball past Federico Marchetti in the Italian goal.

14 – YELLOW CARD – New Zealand forward Rory Fallon is booked for a foul on Fabio Cannavaro.

27 – Italy midfielder Riccardo Montolivo hits a low bending, long-range drive that beats stationary goalkeeper Mark Paston but the ball hits the inside of the post and bounces away.

28 – YELLOW CARD – New Zealand defender Tommy Smith is booked for pulling Daniele De Rossi’s shirt in the area and referee Carlos Batres points to the spot.

29 – GOAL – ITALY 1 NEW ZEALAND 1 – Italy striker Vincenzo Iaquinta sends Paston the wrong way as he confidently puts the ball into the back of the net.

45+2 – HALFTIME – ITALY 1 NEW ZEALAND 1 – The teams go in level at the break, although world champions Italy have dominated after New Zealand’s early goal.

46 – SUBSITUTION – Double change for Italy at the start of the second half with winger Mauro Camoranesi and forward Antonio Di Natale coming on for Simone Pepe and Alberto Gilardino.

61 – SUBSITUTION – Third and final change for Italy with striker Giampaolo Pazzini coming off the bench to replace midfielder Claudio Marchisio.

63 – SUBSTITUTION – New Zealand make a change with forward Chris Wood replacing Fallon.

70 – Italy’s Montolivo hits a fierce low drive from 25 meters and Paston pulls off an excellent one-handed save.

80 – SUBSTITUTION – Midfielder Jeremy Christie is brought on by New Zealand for defender Ivan Vicelich.

83 – New Zealand’s Wood turns his man on the edge of the box and hits a low left-foot shot that goes just wide.

87 – SUBSITUTION – New Zealand captain Ryan Nelson is cautioned for time wasting.

88 – Camoranesi hits a thunderous effort from about 30 meters but Paston pushes the ball behind for a corner.

90+3 – SUBSTITUTION – New Zealand bring on midfielder Andy Barron for forward Chris Killen.

90+5 – FULLTIME – ITALY 1 NEW ZEALAND 1 – New Zealand hang on for a shock 1-1 draw against world champions Italy.

(Writing by Michael Holden)

Italy stick by forwards, but system may change

(Reuters) – World champions Italy made an enforced change in goal for Sunday’s World Cup Group F clash with New Zealand but otherwise kept the same team that drew 1-1 with Paraguay in their opener.

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Goalkeeper Federico Marchetti replaced Gianluigi Buffon, who could miss the rest of the tournament with a back problem, but coach Marcello Lippi resisted the temptation to bring in winger Mauro Camoranesi in place of Claudio Marchisio.

Forwards Alberto Gilardino and Vincenzo Iaquinta were retained despite unconvincing recent showings.

A change in formation from the 4-2-3-1 which started against Paraguay is likely though, with wideman Simone Pepe playing on the right and Marchisio on the left of a 4-4-2.

As already announced, New Zealand named the same team which drew 1-1 with Slovakia in their first match with midfielder Tim Brown fit enough for a place on the bench after a shoulder problem.

(Editing by Jon Bramley)

Cossu to go as 24th man with Italy in disarray

Italy coach Marcello Lippi has injury and formation headaches to ponder during his two days off before the world champions fly out to South Africa with 24th man Andrea Cossu in tow.

World Cup winner Lippi is too experienced to let any anxiety or frustration show but he can be forgiven for tossing and turning in his sleep following Saturday’s 1-1 draw against Switzerland in their final friendly.

He fielded largely a second string and although they were still lacklustre, the display was a clear improvement on his first team’s 2-1 loss to Mexico in a friendly on Thursday.

“Italy mark 2 does not exist. We are one and the same thing,” he told reporters in Geneva when asked if the performance might alter his selections for their World Cup Group F opener against Paraguay on June 14.

One man definitely out of the Cape Town game is midfielder Andrea Pirlo, whose calf injury is so serious that Lippi is taking Cossu to South Africa despite the midfielder not being in his official squad.

Pirlo will be given until June 13, Italy’s deadline for replacing injured players in the squad, to prove he can be fit for some of the tournament with even the second match against New Zealand on June 20 looking an unlikely target.

“Yes, Andrea will come with us. We will try to get him fit for the third game, maybe the fourth,” Lippi said, adding that further injury doubts over midfielders Mauro Camoranesi, Claudio Marchisio and Angelo Palombo would not lead to extra callups.

“Only Cossu will be with us as the 24th man.”

Riccardo Montolivo, whose long, curvy hair is not unlike Pirlo’s, looks best placed to fill in for the midfielder against Paraguay after a tidy if unspectacular showing on Saturday.

Italy have been switching between 4-2-3-1, 4-3-3 and 4-4-2 formations in friendlies and have tried more in training but with just over a week to go before they start the defence of their title, Lippi is not revealing which one he will use.

“In recent days we’ve tried six or seven formations. We will pick the right one,” he said.

The Azzurri, seen as real outside bets by pundits and fans to repeat their 2006 success given recent poor performances, set off for South Africa late on Tuesday.

(Editing by Jon Bramley; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Juve miss Champions League spot, Siena go down

Juventus suffered the biggest embarrassment of a terrible season when their slim Champions League hopes were extinguished in a 1-1 Serie A draw at Catania on Sunday.

The twice European champions, Serie A’s most successful club, have lurched from one bad result to another this term and respite from the misery never looked likely in Sicily despite Claudio Marchisio equalising Matias Silvestre’s opener.

Beleaguered Juve lie seventh, assured of a Europa League qualifying berth next term like sixth-placed Napoli but eight points behind fourth-placed Sampdoria with two matches left.

Samp stayed two points clear in that final Champions League qualifying spot thanks to a 2-0 home win over relegated Livorno with Antonio Cassano scoring a typically classy goal on five minutes and Reto Ziegler blasting in a late free kick.

Luigi Del Neri’s side are four behind third-placed AC Milan after the Rossoneri beat Fiorentina 1-0 on Saturday.

Fifth-placed Palermo are now the only team that can catch Sampdoria and they host them next weekend in a mouthwatering clash.

Strikers Edinson Cavani and Fabrizio Miccoli netted as Palermo won 2-1 at Siena to confirm the home side’s relegation after they were effectively condemned last weekend because of their poor goal difference.

Third-from-bottom Atalanta, who missed a first-half penalty and were reduced to 10 men for the whole second period, stay five points adrift of safety after a calamitous late own goal from Federico Peluso in a 1-1 draw with fourth-from-bottom Bologna.

Peluso sank to his knees and held his head in his hands after he miscontrolled the ball with one touch and it ran into the net following a save by Andrea Consigli.

Conceding the freak equaliser followed a bizarre episode on halftime when the referee awarded Bologna a penalty and dismissed Maximiliano Pellegrino for protesting, then reversed the penalty decision because the ball had been out of play.

Lazio can make sure of safety with victory at home to second-placed Inter Milan later (1845 GMT) but such a result would hand the Serie A title initiative back to bitter city rivals AS Roma, 2-1 winners at Parma on Saturday.

(Editing by Clare Fallon;

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